New genetic test classifies lymphomas

Sep 9, 2019 | Mayo Clinic Hematology Staff | @mayoclinichematologystaff | Comments (2)

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The current diagnostic tools in a pathologist’s arsenal sometimes cannot provide a clear distinction between primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (one of the few lymphomas more common in younger women) and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, the most common type of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma overall. This may occasionally give rise to diagnostic inaccuracy in routine practice and could leave physicians guessing as to the best course of therapy for their patients.

On April 18, a team of researchers led by Lisa Rimsza, M.D., a pathologist and director of the Mayo Clinic Molecular Diagnostics – Arizona Laboratory launched a new genetic test, the Lymph3Cx, which distinguishes between the two types of lymphoma. The establishment of the test and their study results were published in the journal Blood.

Having a test like this available in a clinical laboratory setting can help physicians, determine the correct classification of lymphoma to improve therapeutic decision-making for patient care. The test can also be used as a tool to support clinical trials. Read the rest of the article on Discovery's Edge.

Are you, or a loved one, living with lymphoma and would like to meet others? Explore some of the following discussions taking place in the Blood Cancers & Disorders group on Connect:

Interested in more newsfeed posts like this? Go to the Hematology blog.

here "..common type of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma overall...." broken link
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@jamesfawkes

here "..common type of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma overall...." broken link
Can you change?

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Hi @jamesfawkes, thanks for the heads up about the broken link. It has been corrected.

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